Mastering Jujitsu

Renzo Gracie & John Danaher

Pages

248

Year

2003

Difficulty

Moderate

Themes

strategy, history, phases of combat, grappling theory, self-defense

Written by Renzo Gracie and the legendary coach John Danaher, “Mastering Jujitsu” is a book that treats grappling as an intellectual pursuit as much as a physical one. Rather than simply cataloging techniques, it provides a strategic framework for understanding how combat unfolds from standing to the ground.

Why Start Here

Renzo Gracie brings decades of high-level competition experience, and John Danaher brings his analytical brilliance. Together they produced something rare in martial arts publishing: a book that makes you smarter about fighting, not just more familiar with individual moves.

The book divides combat into distinct phases, from free movement through clinching, takedowns, and ground fighting from both top and bottom positions. For each phase, Gracie and Danaher explain the strategy, show key techniques through more than 250 photographs, and connect everything to the larger picture of how a real grappling exchange develops. This phased approach gives readers a mental map they can apply from day one.

The historical chapters are genuinely engaging, tracing jiu-jitsu’s evolution from classical Japanese origins through the Gracie family’s innovations and into modern competition. Understanding this history is not just interesting but it helps you understand why BJJ emphasizes certain positions and strategies over others.

What to Expect

A well-written 248-page book that moves smoothly between theory, history, and practical application. Danaher’s writing is unusually clear for a martial arts text, reflecting his academic background. The photographs are well-organized and the technique sequences are easy to follow. This book pairs well with a more technique-dense reference like “Jiu-Jitsu University,” providing the strategic thinking that makes all those individual techniques make sense.

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